Friday, April 18, 2008

2155-2175MHz

Free 2155-2175 MHz!

Posted by Sam Churchill on April 11th, 2008


Ladies and gentlemen… I’ve traveled over half our state to be here tonight. I couldn’t get away sooner because my new well was coming in at Coyote Hills and I had to see about it. That well is now flowing at two thousand barrels and it’s paying me an income of five thousand dollars a week. I have two others drilling and I have sixteen producing at Antelope. So, ladies and gentlemen… if I say I’m an oil man you will agree. — There Will Be Blood

In the wake of failed municipal wireless projects that hoped to “bridge the digital divide”, One Economy announced this week that it is a launching a two-year program to bring internet access to 500,000 low-income Americans in more than 50 communities, backed in part by $36 million from AT&T and its foundation (pdf).

Then on Thursday, the John S. and James L. Knight Foundation said it will put up $15 million over five years to create the nonprofit Knight Center of Digital Excellence in Akron, Ohio. Knight has also set up a $10 million Digital Opportunity Fund, which it will use to seed access projects for 26 communities that raise matching funds.

Mark Cuban has a solution to the lack of broadband in the United States — require cable systems to go 100% digital. That would free up lots of bandwidth for data, he says:


There is a dirty little secret in the cable industry. Its being kept secret not by the cable distributors, but by the big cable networks. End this practice and the United States goes from being 3rd world by international broadband standards, to top of the charts and exemplary.

Make this change and Net Neutrality becomes a non issue. There is plenty of bandwidth for everyone.

What is the dirty little secret ?

That your cable company still delivers basic cable networks in analog. Why is this such an important issue ? Because each of those cable networks takes up 6mhz. That translates into about 38mbs per second. Thats 38mbs PER NETWORK.

If we want to truly change the course of broadband in this country, the solution is simple. Just as we had an analog shutdown date for over the air TV signals, we need the same resolution for analog delivered cable networks.

It’s an interesting idea.

Of course Cuban’s HDNet would benefit and everyone else would need a compatible digital cable box. And there would be some infrastructure cost.

Here’s another idea; free the 2155-2175 MHz band.

Dedicate it for Municipal Wireless and manage it like the 3650 band (a quasi-licensed band that requires only a small registration fee).

It’s simple. Cheap. Practical. Nothing needs to be invented.

The 20 MHz of (unused) simplex spectrum, between 2155-2175 MHz, is not being utilized. It could be dedicated to provide municipal wireless using Mobile WiMAX.

Free.

With a range of 3-5 miles, municipal wireless networks could be built for one tenth the cost. Bridge the “digital divide”.

Right now.

M2Z Networks, made good on its threat to take the Federal Communications Commission to court, asking the U.S. Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit to overturn the agency’s dismissal (pdf) of M2Z’s nationwide wireless broadband plan. Too bad they lost.

M2Z said the agency violated numerous laws in throwing out its proposal to provide free, family-friendly broadband service in the 2155-2175 MHz band. Another aspect of the M2Z Networks plan, notes MRT Magazine, is that public-safety entities would be given priority access to the network.

FCC Chairman Kevin Martin recently said the commission plans to launch a proceeding to examine rules for that spectrum. Here’s Martin Statement, Copps Statement and Adelstein’s Statement (pdfs), on the 2155-2175 MHz band proposal.

How hard would it be to make a $99 Freeview-like box for both municipal broadband (at 2.155-2.175 Ghz) and 20 digital tv channels (via ICO at 2.2 Ghz). Add AWS or WiMAX for mobility.
It could be a home run for digital divide advocates.

Triple play.

source : dailywireless.org

MobiTV

MobiTV Combines Unicast & Multicast

Posted by Sam Churchill on April 14th, 2008

MobiTV (blog) says it will speed up the time between channel changes to less than a second and optimize cellular network backhaul by automatically switching video streams from unicast to multicast.

“We have more users in our system than all the IPTV users in Europe,” Kay Johansson, the company’s CTO, said in an interview with RCR Wireless News. The company said it has 4-million subscribers.

The company’s new Optimized Delivery Server will combine unicast and multicast distribution. If 50 subscribers are watching the same channel in one sector, the server will automatically begin streaming that channel in multicast to that group of customers, rather than relying on a solely unicast approach, which can be cumbersome and costly.

This new hybrid approach is expected to lower the cost of distribution and optimize backhaul requirements.

In-stream insertions for live and linear-clip content and post- and pre-roll ad placements for video-on-demand and downloaded content will all be possible with personalized targeting that will be based on each user’s profile information, the company said.

The new changes, including faster channel changing, are expected to be available next month.

MobiTV believes ATSC M/H offers the most viable opportunity for broadcast mobile TV services in the United States and has actively been involved in the standardization process for the past 18 months. ATSC-M/H (for Mobile/Handheld) would use digital TV for mobile reception.

The company plans to demo broadcast mobile TV service running over ATSC with interactive components at the NAB Show in Las Vegas this week. A-VSB has been proposed to the ATSC for its upcoming mobile and handheld standard ATSC-M/H.

“We can show we have technology that can make money for both the carriers and the broadcasters if they work together,” Johansson said.

A-VSB developed by Samsung Electronics and Rohde & Schwarz, and MPH proposed by Harris and LG Electronics are competing for a mobile television broadcast standard.

No timeframe has been announced for possible availability of ATSC-based A-VSB, MPH or Mobile-Pedestrian-Handheld mobile television, but officials hope to launch a system in time for the big analog shutdown in February, 2009.

A recent study commissioned by the NAB states that mobile DTV could pull in $2 billion in annual revenue for broadcasters by 2012 if a standard is adopted quickly and equipment is swiftly put into consumer’s hands. But mobile DTV services will only succeed if one universal standard is adopted by 2009, according to the report.

Meanwhile, other mobile television standards have already solidified, including; DVB-H, DVB-SH, MediaFLO, TDtv and MXtv in addition to the services offered over the cellular network such as MobiTV and Sling Player Mobile.

TDtv and MXtv can multicast live to multiple users or unicast to individual users — depending on channel demand — an advantage that television broadcasters, MediaFLO and DVB-H don’t have. In addition MXtv does not require a special radio receiver chip — the video stream is picked up over the same WiMAX silicon.

At NAB in Las Vegas, this week Qualcomm is showing off MediaFLO utilized for car entertainment system. For now, Qualcomm is hoping to spark imaginations with its concept media vehicle. The MediaFLO receiver is mounted in the rear center console, allowing the backseat passengers to control the 9″ VGA monitors mounted on the back of the headrests in front of them. MediaFLO works on a dedicated 700 MHz broadcast network, streaming QVGA (320 x 240 @ 15-30 fps) resolution without need for a line-of-sight connection.

Mobile Content Consumption:
iPhone, Smartphone and Total Market: January 2008

Activity

iPhone

Smartphone*

Market

Any news or info via browser

84.8%

58.2%

13.1%

Accessed web search

58.6%

37.0%

6.1%

Watched mobile TV and/or video

30.9%

14.2%

4.6%

Watched on-demand video or TV
programming

20.9%

7.0%

1.4%

Accessed Social Networking
Site or Blog

49.7%

19.4%

4.2%

Listened to music on mobile
phone

74.1%

27.9%

6.7%

Source:M:Metrics. Data based on three-month moving average for period ending 31st January 2008, n = 31,389.
*Smartphones include devices running Windows, Symbian, RIM or Apple operating
systems.


source : dailywireless.org

ICO G-1 Rocket

ICO G-1 In Space

Posted by Sam Churchill on April 14th, 2008

The heaviest payload ever launched by an Atlas rocket, Craig McCaw’s ICO G-1 (pdf), achieved successful separation today (video), one of the biggest gambles yet for the telecom entrepreneur, as Telephony Online reports. Ground controllers have acquired the first signals from the ICO G1 spacecraft and delivered the ICO G1 within one nautical mile of the target orbit.

The cost of the ICO-1 satellite, constructed by Space Systems/Loral, the booster rocket (built by Lockheed Martin) and the launch mission itself (handled by United Launch Alliance) is running half a billion dollars, and ICO hasn’t even started building the terrestrial system yet.

ICO G1 is over 27 feet tall, with a 39 foot mesh reflector that will be unfurled in space and a pair of power-generating solar wings to span over 100 feet. Weighing 14,625 pounds, it is the heaviest satellite ever launched aboard an Atlas V booster and will be located at 92.85 degrees west, providing ubiquitous coverage over the United States.

The satellite, based on Loral’s 1300 platform, and a network of ground repeaters, will enable ICO to market an interactive media service combining live TV, enhanced navigation and emergency assistance across the United States starting next year.

ICO Global spent years over technology re-direction and regulatory wrangling.

Now, instead of the voice and broadband network originally planned, ICO is pursuing mobile TV, creating a broadcast network that blankets the US with a common digital video signal and using cellular transmitters to fill in the gaps in dense urban areas.

The result will be a mobile TV that ICO can pit directly against Qualcomm’s MediaFLO as well as possible resurgence of Digital Video Broadcast-Handheld (DVB-H) technology in the US that has long been written off for dead.

ICO is using a variant of DVB-H called DVB-Satellite services to Handhelds (DVB-SH). It uses the same S-band 2-GHz spectrum to transmit both from space and on the ground. ICO G-1 will provide the bulk of the coverage, using ground-based beam-forming techniques. Meanwhile, terrestrial networks in major urban areas will reinforce the signal in urban canyons and hilly terrain where there is no direct line of site to the heavens.

To fill in its footprint, ICO estimates it will have to build 1500 to 2000 transmission sites using Alcatel-Lucent gear. The costs of each site will be comparable to that of building a cellular site, but in order to achieve nationwide coverage, ICO must build far fewer of them. “If we were to build a nationwide cellular network, it would take 20,000 to 30,000 sites,” said Christopher Doherty, VP of public relations for ICO. “To give you an example, we think it will only take 14 sites to cover Raleigh-Durham.”

Once the darling of Wall Street, operators like Iridium, Motient, Globalstar and ICO all went bankrupt at the turn of the millennium as their plans to offer global satellite voice and data coverage fizzled. McGaw bailed ICO out of bankruptcy in 2000 and became the company’s chairman.

The company faced other problems; its first Hughes-built satellite wound up at the bottom of the South Pacific. It successfully launched a medium Earth orbit satellite from Cape Canaveral in 2001, but plans to launch the remaining 9 satellites to complete the global voice and data network went on hold indefinitely.

In 2003, ICO and the satellite providers successfully lobbied the FCC to allow them to use their spectrum for both terrestrial and satellite service. Since then the satellite business has enjoyed a revival. While companies like Motient—renamed Terrestar—pursued their original broadband and voice plans, ICO used the opportunity to pursue an entirely new business model: mobile TV.

Qualcomm is the clear dominant player in mobile TV in the US with MediaFLO that uses 700 MHz spectrum. Qualcomm has signed on two major cellular operators to carry its TV service, Verizon Wireless and AT&T, but because the 700 MHz band hasn’t been fully cleared by its current broadcaster occupants, MediaFLO has launched only in limited markets. Still, only 4.6% of U.S. wireless users watch video on their handsets, according to M:Metrics, while more than 13% access the Internet on their phones.

When ICO’s mobile TV service goes live in 2009, it could be facing a fairly entrenched competitor. But ICO is pursuing larger stand-alone media players, taking advantage of DVB-SH’s larger screen resolution and 500 kb/s channel capacity. “We don’t want to focus on the small cellular screen, which is really only good for watching a 4-minute clip,” Doherty said.

ICO will focus on in-vehicle displays offering at first a “set-top box in the trunk” that links into the on-dash or rear-seat displays in cars, SUVs and vans. Not only will it provide 10 to 15 channels of TV, the two-way capabilities of the network will allow it deliver vehicle navigation services as well as emergency two-way calling and messaging.

Hughes has already agreed to manufacture devices for the initial deployment, and DiBcom has agreed to supply DVB-SH chipsets. ICO is also partnering with fellow McGaw venture Clearwire to trial a potential hybrid Mobile WiMAX and TV service.

Qualcomm won’t be leaving the in-vehicle market to ICO. Today at the National Association of Broadcasters conference, Qualcomm announced its first live demonstration of MediaFLO piped directly to a car entertainment system.

In the UK both T-Mobile and Orange are about to launch trials using the competing MBMS (Multimedia Broadcast Multicast Service) technology, which utilises existing 3G networks and spectrum. The technology for that trial is being provided by NextWave Wireless. Up to 4 GSM Timeslots may be used for one MBMS bearer in the downlink.

source : dailywireless.org

Unlimited Cellular

Cellular Goes Unlimited

Posted by Sam Churchill on April 15th, 2008

Verizon Wireless this week unveiled two all-you-can-eat plans for smartphones.

The carrier, taking on rivals AT&T and Sprint, is adding unlimited mobile email and browsing plans for small business users and everyday consumers respectively.

For $30 a month, Verizon subscribers will be able to surf and send emails from their phones until their fingers ache, says Unstrung. It requires a qualifying voice plan through business sales channels. The plan will work with the Verizon SMT5800, the XV6800, and the Motorola Q9m. The operator already has a similar offering for the BlackBerry and promises to offer the plan for more smartphone models soon.

The hosted VZEmail service, meanwhile, is aimed at the small business owner. It adds “storage, capacity, and speed” of an enterprise system, without the expense. The plan starts at $8 a month for a basic email setup.

The big three operators are now pushing unlimited talk for $99 a month:

Speaking with Unstrung at the CTIA Show in Vegas recently, Verizon wireless CTO Tony Melone explained why the operator has simultaneously embraced unlimited calling for voice, while moving away from unlimited data.

“There is a limit to how much people can talk in a given month, yet the industry took 25 years to sort of get to an unlimited voice,” Melone says. “With data, where’s virtually no limit on… consumption; the industry went right out of the gate with unlimited, which is kind of backwards in my opinion.”

Meanwhile, Leap Wireless already offers unlimited voice plans at around half of the cost of the big operator’s services.

In other news, T-Mobile signed up Juice Wireless as a social-networking provider for its network. JuiceCaster lets you meet new people, connect with friends and share your photos and videos directly from your mobile phone and instantly update your status on Twitter and Facebook. T-Mobile is its first Tier I operator customer.

source : dailywireless.org

700MHz Plan

Public Safety: We Like 700MHz Public/Private Plan

Posted by Sam Churchill on April 17th, 2008

Public-safety groups scrambled to salvage support for a shared public/private national wireless broadband network, following calls by some House Republicans to abandon in the 700 MHz D-Block re-auction, reports RCR Wireless News.

APCO International believes a public-private partnership between the D Block and public safety is currently the most viable option for funding and deployment of a national interoperable broadband network for public safety,” said Willis Carter, president of the Association of Public-Safety Officials International. “The FCC should move with all deliberative speed while ensuring that public-safety needs are addressed.”

No bidder put up the $1.3 billion minimum for the D Block in the recently completed 700 MHz auction.

Reps. Joe Barton (R-Texas), ranking minority member of the House Commerce Committee, Cliff Stearns (R-Fla.), and Fred Upton (R-Mich.) have serious reservations about the public-private framework. Stearns would like to re-auction the D Block without any conditions, selling the spectrum to commercial providers and giving the proceeds to public safety to build their own nationwide system, presumably along the lines of the Integrated Wireless Network (IWS), using narrow band, push-to-talk Project 25 radios and dedicated spectrum.

Harlin McEwen, chairman and CEO of the Public Safety Spectrum Trust Corporation, said he doubted a straight forward D-Block auction could raise enough money. He estimated it would cost at least $6 billion. The PSST is the FCC-approved 700 MHz public-safety broadband licensee.

FCC Chairman Kevin Martin and Commissioner Michael Copps voiced continued support for the public-private approach, subject to rule changes geared to attracting a private-sector entity willing partner with public safety.

In a separate but related issue, House Commerce Committee Chairman John Dingell (D-Mich.) grilled Cyren Call Communications Corp. Chairman Morgan O’Brien about his company’s relationship with the PSST and pre-auction talks with prospective bidders. Cyren Call is the official advisor to the PSST. Cyren Call, funded by several venture capital firms, has made at least one loan to the PSST.

Dingell requested documents related to financial arrangements between Cyren Call and PSST.

The FCC and Congress are investigating allegations surrounding the D-Block failure, including the abrupt collapse of Frontline Wireless — a one-time, leading D-Block candidate — shortly before the Jan. 24 start of the auction. The FCC’s Martin said he will await the results of the agency’s inspector general’s probe before initiating a new rulemaking on the D Block.

Martin told lawmakers all options are on the table.

During the 4½-hour hearing, virtually every member of the Subcommittee stated that a nationwide, interoperable public-safety network is a high priority.

The Integrated Wireless Network (IWN), was proposed seven years ago to provide interoperable, mobile data and voice communications to DOJ, the Department of Homeland Security (DHS), the U.S. Treasury Department.

But according to an audit by the U.S. Department of Justice (DOJ) inspector general, it is “at a high risk of failure.” Industry observers say the federal radio network would cost $5 billion to $30 billion to build —- money that has not been appropriated by Congress.

source : dailywireless.org

Sanyo Waterproof camcorder

Sanyo's Xacti DMX-CA8 waterproof camcorder drips VGA weak sauce


Not much to get excited about here unless you've got a thing for shooting 640 x 480 VGA video underwater. Shipping in May for a bit less than $500, Sanyo's latest waterproof Xacti packs a 5x optical zoom and 8 megapixel CMOS sensor for stills and MPEG-4 AVC/H.264 video recordings at 60fps to SDHC media. It also carries JIS IPX5 and IPX8 waterproof ratings which means it'll go to a depth of 1.5-meters for up to 1-hour without electronic seizure. Video riot after the break.

source : engadget.com

Sunday, April 13, 2008

Sony mylo 2

Sony mylo 2 firmware version 1.100 adds WMV and SHOUTcast support

Sony mylo 2

Sony's do-everything-except-for-make-calls mylo has been updated to firmware version 1.100, and is now available at Sony's support site as a 61MB download. Because you ran out of things to do with your mylo about, say, ten minutes after unboxing it, rejoice -- the update adds WMV file support, SHOUTcast widget support (the widget is a separate download), a "Game" item on the HOME menu for easier access to all those games you downloaded to the COM-2 unit, and, of course, improved "system stability".

source : engadget.com

measure your smile

Omron's Okao Catch measures the intensity of your smile


It was inevitable, really. Not even two months after jolly researchers at Kansai University developed a machine to calculate the quantity of a person's laughter comes a new method of measuring just how hard you're cheesing. According to Omron's Yasushi Kawamoto, the Okao Catch technology is able to closely analyze "the curves of the lips, eye movement and other facial characteristics to decide how much a person is smiling." In a recent demonstration, it threw up percentages as people moved in front of a camcorder and began to grin, and while a somber individual did net an astounding score of zero, it doesn't seem that negative numbers are doled out for frowners. Besides being incredibly novel, the creators are hoping that it can be used in the medical field for accurately judging the "emotional state of patients," in robotics for helping androids "decipher human reactions" and in dressing rooms assisting B-list celebs improve their charm.

source : engadget.com

LG Touch Screen Phone

LG's touchscreen T80 media player only has 4GB


LG's giving our Danish friends a little something to look forward to: the 3-inch 400 x 240 touchscreen T80, which has 4GB of storage, DVB-T and FM tuners, and OGG support (as well as the usual MP3, WMA, MPEG-4, etc.) in a chubby 0.5-inch thick package. We hear it's priced at a hefty €299 (~$470 US), which might prove a tad prohibitive to sales among the intelligent.

Friday, April 11, 2008

North American Union

North American Union - US House of Rep.


Total Surveillance - NWO

Read this doc on Scribd: The New World Order

Nokia Tablet

Nokia Tablet as PVR

Posted by Sam Churchill on April 10th, 2008

Nokia announced the WiMAX-enabled version of the N810 tablet at CTIA Wireless 2008 last week. It can be used on the Sprint/Clearwire XOHM network later this year.

Now Monsoon Multimedia has announced support its HAVA player on the tablet, allowing customers to view and control their home TV from anywhere in the world over WiMAX or Wi-Fi. It will be available by June for the Nokia Webtablet as a free direct download.

The TV source is connected to the HAVA device installed in your home (which costs $99-$250).
Users can view their home TV on multiple PCs within the home network or simultaneously on a Nokia Internet Tablet at home or anywhere in the world over the internet. The company says it has “all the functionality of a Slingbox, but with many more features.” The SlingPlayer Mobile also runs on Symbian phones.

HAVA provides controls for Pause, Play, Rewind, Skip, Record, Guide, Menu, Navigation using touch-screen (stylus) inputs or key press inputs on the tablet. The Tablet can also function as a “PVR-on-the-go”, allowing users to record their favorite TV shows and later watch them on their tablets from local memory.

source : dailywireless.org

Google - Page you are the man!

Google Transit Maps + WiFi

Posted by Sam Churchill on April 11th, 2008

Google Transit covers some 23 U.S. cities and the national mass transit system of Japan and bigger cities in Australia and Europe. Go to Google Maps. Type in a query for directions.

If your results include a button for “Take Public Transit,” Google Transit will spell out directions to the closest station or bus stop, including schedule information.

In the United States. Google Transit Maps are available for;

You can also track the Olympic torch on the way to Beijing.

Outfitting a bus with wireless capability costs about $1,000 to $2,000, reports USA Today.

Here are some transit agencies in the United States adopting Wi-Fi.

In Cincinnati, the bus system, worked with Dayton, Ohio-based HarborLink, paying $1,500 per bus for installation and nothing for the monthly service. The Utah Transit Authority reports the number of unique wireless users on its buses increased from about 500 in January’s start-up to 2,500 by the end of March.

source : dailywireless.org

PS3 Laptop

The PS3 Laptop: from Ben Heck to Engadget with love


Rewind back to late 2006. The PS3 was launching alongside the Wii and geeky editors like ourselves were having a field day. We'd already managed to convince our good pal Ben Heck to build another Xbox 360 laptop and the Wii Laptop, so it was only a matter of time before we started brainstorming on how the hell we could possibly fit a PS3 into a "portable" enclosure. That's the part where Ben stepped up his game and worked his magic -- on and off for almost a year and a half -- to build... the PS3 Laptop!

The essential specs:
  • Original backwards compatible 60GB model
  • 17-inch LCD HDTV screen: 720p
  • HDMI-DVI connection (same as last Xbox 360 laptop)
  • Built-in keyboard, USB ports, stereo speakers, headphone jack
  • Size: 17 x 13.75 x 3-inches
  • Weight: 16 pounds!
You want this one of a kind piece of kit for your very own, PlayStation fanboys? You got it. We're auctioning this thing for charity real soon, so watch out for details (we'll also have some video of the PS3 Laptop in action on the site tomorrow). And, naturally, big ups to our pal Ben Heck for the long hours and love he put into this thing. The man is truly a hero of ours, so be sure to hit up his site to check out his other projects, as well as the other instructional stuff he's done here on Engadget.

P.S. -Please forgive the wonky caption text in the photo gallery, we're fixing the type so it's legible.

wooden laptop

Fujitsu's WoodShell laptop: go ahead hippie, hug it


That's Fujitsu's WoodShell concept PC. It joins an increasingly common trend of so called "natural" products already demonstrated by MSI, ASUS, Olympus, LG and others. No specs are provided on this feel-good piece. However, we presume it's powered by the blood and tears wrung from the baby Gore's heartbreak.

source : engadget.com

Eyeglass mountable scanner

Brother Industries shows off eyeglass-mountable retina scanning display

While it's yet to be seen if eyeglass-mountable displays will become as commonly used as, say, Bluetooth headsets anytime soon, Brother Industries at least looks to be making some steady progress at shrinking 'em down to a reasonable size, and it's got a few other tricks up its sleeve to boot. That latter bit comes from its use of a retina-scanning system as opposed to a simple LCD mounted in front of your eye, which effectively uses your retina as a screen to make it appear like images are actually floating in space in front of you. What's more, while the eyepiece currently needs to be wired to a rather sizable contraption in order to pump out those free-floating images, the company says it expects to be able to switch to a wireless system and shrink things down to a decidedly more wearable size by 2010.

source : engadget.com

1TB Laptop

ASUS lets loose terabyte-packin' M70 laptop

We got our hands on ASUS's beefy M70 laptop way back at CES earlier this year, but it looks like the company has just now gotten around to letting the monster loose on the general populace. In case you missed it, this one packs up to one terabyte of storage (in the form of two 500GB drives), along with a 17-inch WUXGA display, your choice of Core 2 Duo processors up to a T9300, ATI Mobile Radeon HD3650 or HD3470 graphics, and an optional Blu-ray drive, among other expectedly top-end features. To make sure no one else but you gets to toy around with all that, ASUS has also seen fit to include not one but two security measures, including the usual fingerprint scanner and ASUS's trademark SmartLogon face-scanning technology. No word on a price, but we're guessing that's a detail best kept on a need to know basis.

source : engadget.com

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